
During an hour-long interview, he lovingly compared child actress Abigail Breslin to ‘‘a little skin-covered lawn dart'', noted that the sitcom Friends was so popular in the '90s it ‘‘replaced Christianity'', and said of the hotel that it was the first place he stayed in Los Angeles as a starving young actor, ‘‘I think it's just held together by like, you know, congealed actor blood".
All of these lines were delivered crisply, in a clear, deep voice and with a twinge of cynicism; Reynolds, for whatever it's worth, has excellent diction.
He also has a motorcycle and has been romantically linked to Scarlett Johansson. And yet the two tattoos peeking out of his long-sleeve shirt come as a surprise, given the fact that in his new movie, Definitely, Maybe, he stars as a sweet single dad opposite Breslin, who played Olive Hoover in Little Miss Sunshine.
Reynolds (31), interviewed at the Regent Beverly Wilshire in Beverly Hills, seemed sheepish about the tattoos, which decorate his left forearm. One is a drawing of the Nine O'Clock Gun, an old naval cannon that goes off every night at nine in Stanley Park, in Reynolds' native Vancouver, Canada.
The other tattoo, on the underside of his wrist, is some handwritten message. And Reynolds, who was engaged for two years to singer Alanis Morissette, will neither let a nosy reporter read that tattoo nor describe what it says.
Nor, to continue in this vein, will he confirm that he's dating Scarlett Johansson, or is engaged to Scarlett Johansson, or discuss if the tattoo has something to do with Scarlett Johansson.
Maybe it's his name, the soft alliteration inviting forgetfulness, or the fact that despite amassing a list of credits in a range of commercial movies, he has yet to build a body of work, exactly.
But John August, who directed Reynolds in The Nines, calls Reynolds the Facebook generation's actor.
‘‘If a person is 16 to 25, they all know who Ryan Reynolds is,'' August said. ‘‘ . . . He became a star through aggregation rather than through one giant movie".
Those non-giant movies include broad comedies (Just Friends, Van Wilder), horror (The Amityville Horror remake) and thriller/action (Blade: Trinity, Smokin' Aces).
The titles might seem forgettable, but directors have taken note of Reynolds' work ethic, August said.
‘‘Actors have their public reputation, which is all the movies you've seen them in, but they also have the private reputation, which is what all the directors who've worked with the actors will say".
Writer-director Adam Brooks discovered this when working with Reynolds on Smokin' Aces, and thought he would be right for the part of Will Hayes, a once-idealistic political operative adrift in mid-30s yuppie ennui in Definitely, Maybe.
‘‘He has no vanity about himself, so it's a very straightforward conversation with him,'' said Brooks, who wrote the scripts for the romantic comedies French Kiss and Bridget Jones: Edge of Reason, and is directing his own screenplay with Definitely, Maybe.
Definitely, Maybe, as a cultural timepiece, is a throwback to the era of Tom Hanks in Sleepless in Seattle.
And it was the spirit of Hanks - and Jimmy Stewart - that attracted Reynolds to the role.
‘‘The character just felt like classic male, as opposed to [what] you see a lot of, I think, in Hollywood in particular, is a lot of androgyny these days,'' he said.
‘‘It's a trend I think specifically because . . . the world is perhaps moving further away from patriarchy maybe".
‘‘ . . . He was kind to women, kind to men, he was in his skin,'' Reynolds said of his character.
‘‘He was trying to do the right thing . . . I love that; it's unusual to read that". - By Paul Brownfield/Los Angeles Times-Washington Post